In 1920, having served a slapstick apprenticeship in the shorts of Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle, Buster Keaton had earned the opportunity to headline his own series of two-reel comedies. The very moment at which he emerged as a star of his own shorts, Keaton was recruited to appear in his first feature film, The Saphead, based on a popular stage play. Keaton stars as Bertie Van Alstyne, the pampered son of a powerful Wall Street financier (William H. Crane). Having known no other lifestyle but privilege, he wanders through a variety of misadventures—an attempt at courtship, a trip to an illegal gambling den, and a tumble onto the floor of the Stock Exchange—oblivious to the obstacles that stand before him. Though Keaton was not the primary creative force behind The Saphead, as he was on his short films, it became hugely important in shaping his on-screen persona: the lonely, stone-faced man thwarted by circumstance, inept at the art of romance, yet undaunted in his struggle for love within a chaotic world.
Directed by Herbert Blaché and Winchell Smith
Written by June Mathis
Based on the Play "The Henrietta" by Bronson Howard, and the Play "The New Henrietta" by Victor Mapes and Winchell Smith
Produced by John Golden, Marcus Loew, and Winchell Smith
Cinematography by Harold Wenstrom
Art Direction by F.H. Webster
Starring Buster Keaton, Beulah Booker, Edward Connelly, Edward Jobson, Edward Alexander, Odette Taylor, Carol Holloway, Irving Cummings, Jack Livingston, and William H. Crane
Music Arranged and Directed by Robert Israel